The Denver University Law Review is pleased to announce the Emerging Scholar Award. This exclusive opportunity is for all scholars who have received their J.D. as of March 1, 2015 and have not yet accepted a tenure-track teaching position nor held a full-time teaching position for more than three years. The selected recipient will receive an award of $500 and publication in Issue 1, Volume 93, scheduled for early 2016.

DULR Online's The Return of Constitutional Federalism Issue features four papers from highly regarded scholars that respond to an article authored by Logan Everett Sawyer III, titled The Return of Constitional Federalism (forthcoming in an upcoming issue of volume 91 of the Denver University Law Review). Each paper in the issue reviews Professor Sawyer's article in-depth, as well as making additional arguments for or against Professor Sawyer's conclusions.

DULR Online's Proxy Plumbing Issue features five student articles covering different aspects of the SEC's Concept Release on the U.S. Proxy System and a call for a version 2.0 to address certain shortcomings of the Release. The Proxy Plumbing Issue represents the continued collaboration between the Denver University Law Review, DULR Online, and Professor J. Robert Brown, Jr.

Please explore the full issue here, including a thoughtful introduction to the issue by Professor Brown.

Volume 92 Board of Editors Announced

Denver University Law Review is excited to announce the Volume 92 Board of Editors. Please join us in congratulating them in this accomplishment and supporting them in continuing the fine tradition of the Denver University Law Review. Please click here to view the masthead.

DULR Online Presents the JOBS Act Issue

DULR Online is proud to present its JOBS Act Issue. This issue features eight student articles covering different aspects of the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act, the landmark legislation passed by Congress in 2012 "[t]o increase American job creation and economic growth by improving access to the public capital markets for emerging growth companies." The JOBS Act Issue represents a unique collaboration between the Denver University Law Review, DULR Online, and Professor J. Robert Brown, Jr. Please explore the full issue here.

Subscriptions and Submissions

For information on how to subscribe to the Denver University Law Review, please click here.

For the guidelines on how to submit an article to Denver University Law Review, please click here. If you would like to submit a shorter piece to DULR Online, please contact the Online Editor, Nicholas Rising, at nrising16@law.du.edu.

On March 4, 2011, the Denver University Law Review hosted a symposium to discuss recent advances in neuroscientific techniques and methods that offer both promise and pitfalls for law. This symposium provided insight into current neuroscientific capabilities, discussed several trends, and highlighted recent and forthcoming developments.

As a follow-up to our symposium, many of our speakers agreed to continue the conversation by posting their powerpoint presentations and articles on our online supplement.

Guilty Minds Symposium Keynote Speaker and Vanderbilt University Professor Owen Jones and Hon. Morris Hoffman would like to share an abstract of their paper, Sorting Guilty Minds, forthcoming later this year. For full bios, click here. For the abstract, please click here.

Ken Murray is currently an Assistant Federal Public Defender with the Capital Habeas Unit, Federal Public Defender for the District of Arizona. For full bio, click here. To view his presentation, Neuroscience and Sentencing, please click here.

ASU Professor Betsy Grey publishes and teaches on issues of tort law, products liability and mass tort litigation, as well as neuroscience and law, and has presented to judicial conferences and other professional groups on these issues. For full bio, click here. To view her presentation, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD): Moving Beyond the Military Context, please click here.

Dr. Jonathan Brodie, PhD-MD, is the Marvin Stern Professor of Psychiatry at New York University School of Medicine. He was a National Institute of Health postdoctoral Fellow in Biochemistry at Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation, as well as a tenured Professor of Biochemistry at the School of Medicine at SUNY at Buffalo. For full bio, click here. To view his presentation, please click here for Part I and here for Part II.

Wednesday

Jan192011

Click here for Keynote Owen D. Jones' Working Paper, "Brain Imaging for Legal Thinkers: A Guide for the Perplexed."